* Circle and number colonies you want sequence (I do this because I'll replica plate the ones I'm sending) or you can ask them to pick a variety.

* Circle and number colonies you want sequence (I do this because I'll replica plate the ones I'm sending) or you can ask them to pick a variety.

* Submitting costs ~$3/sample extra.

* Submitting costs ~$3/sample extra.

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== Order Submission Deadline ==

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* The cutoff time for sequencing is 4PM.

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* You can submit samples to the box a little after 4PM as long as you electronically submitted your order by 4PM. We are one of the last pickup sites so it takes a while for the person to get to our box.

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== Dropping of your samples to the Lab ==

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If you miss the deadline, you can drop off samples at [https://www.google.com/maps/place/1551+Eastlake+Ave+E/@47.633399,-122.326322,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x54901521431b5d01:0xdfaa192e0856f09e 1551 Eastlake Avenue E.]

SUBMIT TO UW By REQUEST Box A

In summer of 2013 we got a GeneWiz box outside our lab. To use this box, select "UW Box A," the by-request box, so they know to pick up our samples. They don't come up to our box if nobody submitted a sample.

Preparing Samples

15 uL total including 5 uL of 5 uM primers.

Keep a fresh stock of 5 uM primers that you take good care of (keep clean) and replace often with fresh stock.

GeneWiz sample submission guideline

Red Flags:

Low concentration minipreps (<70 ng/uL) frequently fail when submitted to sequencing. It may be due to impurities that co-elute; if you submit many uL of this to meet the 500 ng/sample requirement, then you will have more of these impurities present. -Janet 3/20/2012

Sequencing Un-Purified PCR products

Submit 10 uL of PCR product and 5 uL of 5uM primer in a separate tube.

Best to submit a printed picture of the gel, too.

Submitting un-purified product costs ~$3/sample extra.

pmol/uL = uM

Sequencing Colonies

Submit 5uM primer in a separate tube and a plate with colonies.

Circle and number colonies you want sequence (I do this because I'll replica plate the ones I'm sending) or you can ask them to pick a variety.

Submitting costs ~$3/sample extra.

Order Submission Deadline

The cutoff time for sequencing is 4PM.

You can submit samples to the box a little after 4PM as long as you electronically submitted your order by 4PM. We are one of the last pickup sites so it takes a while for the person to get to our box.

Dropping of your samples to the Lab

When Sequencing Fails

There are several ways it can fail & you can see the GeneWiz help for causes/solutions below. You can also watch this GeneWiz webinar. Don't hesitate to call GeneWiz customer support -- their customer service is incredible.

GeneWiz has very high standards for passing sequencing reactions. About 1/2 of your attempts may fail. Sometimes you can look at the trace file and decide it is good enough on your own despite a failed label.

multiple are present on your DNA or you accidentally have a mixture of DNA templates.

You can prepare a new miniprep, with the hope that your first one was contaminated with another plasmid. Otherwise, you have to assume the plasmid you built accidentally contains an extra priming site. Of course, miniprepping from single colonies will reduce the possibility of mixed templates.

Note: a plasmid can contain an extra priming site via pcr/assembly fluke OR the insert you add can contain a mispriming site.

hairpin present, repetitive sequence, or high GC content can terminate the rxn sequencing. Note: they have several "difficult sequencing" protocols that can be used; select them in the form.

too much DNA

results in smears. They can dilute the sample you sent and re-run it. Use 10ng/uL/kb of DNA.

bubble in capillary

can appear as a smear. You won't know when this happens, but customer support may be able to tell.

dye blobs

too many terminating nucleotides remain after their purification -- see image on right. A big peak covers the sequence you want. They generally have it at the beginning, so you should start your priming ~ 100 bp away from the sequence of interest. They happen on PCR products and plasmid & are best visually edited (ignored.)

you can trust a sequence that fails because of high background more than you can non-specific

When it fails, try again!

You can submit 2 samples per order for a free repeat, but they must be on the same templates you submitted.

You can resequence as many as you like for 1/2 price and you have the choice to use new preps. This allows you to use a fresh miniprep or primer batch. If you want to submit fresh samples for 1/2 price, you should contact customer service and get approval. Write in the comments section at the bottom which samples are 1/2 price repeats, and which row & order the original failed sequence was in. Then call them with the order number for this new request/order. Janet 7/18/2012

Whether or not your repeat will be successful depends on several variables such as:

the concentration and quality of the sample -- if a "no priming" or "poor quality" samples is "no priming" or "poor quality" after you sequence again, the quality and quantity might be too bad to work the 2nd time.

you also may have a GC-rich region, hairpin or general difficult template that is causing binding issues, a problem with the binding site, a problem with the primer, etc.

Vague primer design instructions

"We recommend designing your sequencing primers in a region that is 100 bases upstream of your sequence of interest. If you do not have the luxury of having this buffer, the closest you want the primer to be to your area of interest is 50-60 bases. Anything closer and you risk missing a portion of your area of interest. The primers should be about 18-24 bases in length with a Tm of 56-60 degrees. The GC content should be about 45-55%. Many vendors that provide oligo synthesis services have software into which you can plug your primer sequence to check for Tm, GC content and homodimerization. For the oligo purity, desalting is all that is needed for sequencing" (link)

Note that Finnzymes reports Tm higher than other calculators, so 62-65oC is probably good if using a Finnzyme calculation.

Sequencing un-purified PCR products

chose "custom" for the type of sequencing reaction

you can leave the DNA concentration field blank

you can't do nano drop on DNA that hasn't been cleaned up (says customer service 1/2014) so you would have to compare it to a known concentration of ladder anyway.

pmol/uL [=] uM

include a photo of your gel in with the sequencing form.

It costs ~$3 more per reaction.

You can submit OneTaq 2X products, even though it has loading dye in it.

Sequencing gel purified PCR products

Organic solvents inhibit/inactivate the Taq used in Sanger sequencing.

Tip sent by technical support to Janet 5/2013:

Tips for Column Purification of Template DNA

Here are a few guidelines to help aid in the effective column purification of your product.

This will help to eliminate carry over of ethanol into the eluate.

Prior to elution, there is a wash step that includes a high concentration of ethanol. If you are using a micro spin column, after the wash step, please spin samples at maximum speed in the microfuge 2 times for 2 minutes decanting the flow through completely after the first spin and placing the column in a fresh tube for elution after the second spin.

If there is a rim around the membrane, carefully remove residual ethanol using a pipette tip after the second spin and then let the column sit for 2 minutes on the bench top prior to elution in order to promote residual ethanol evaporation.

Carefully elute with EB or water heated to 50'C by adding drop wise to the membrane surface. (I usually let this sit a couple min before spinning -ALS)